nanog mailing list archives
Re: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network
From: George William Herbert <george.herbert () gmail com>
Date: Fri, 5 May 2017 08:13:07 -0700
You can usually run OpenVPN from a cloud host. The source IP changing possibly should require only one open exception to the local VPN termination point. Better, find a cloud that doesn't do that shit with changing endpoints and gives you real VPNs. What sort of cloud doesn't these days?...?... Sent from my iPhone
On May 4, 2017, at 10:08 AM, Torres, Matt <matt.torres () state or us> wrote: Unfortunately, a private connection or VPN to the cloud service provider is not available right now, but I can see how that could help solve my problem. :-) ~MattIs it possible for you to get a private/direct connect service from your network perimeter to the cloud provider and eliminate using the public connectivity? Or because its Internet-based you have to use public connectivity?
Current thread:
- Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network Torres, Matt (May 04)
- RE: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network James Breeden (May 04)
- RE: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network Torres, Matt (May 05)
- Re: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network George William Herbert (May 05)
- RE: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network Torres, Matt (May 05)
- Re: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network Yan Filyurin (May 05)
- Re: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network Yan Filyurin (May 05)
- RE: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network Torres, Matt (May 05)
- RE: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network Torres, Matt (May 05)
- RE: Ingress filtering from an external cloud service to the internal network James Breeden (May 04)